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Tuesday, April 22, 2025 at 11:19 PM
Land Loans

Pillen plan to shift taxes onto sales tax, off property tax getssupport

FREMONT – Judging from a handful of people who attended a town hall meeting Monday, Gov. Jim Pillen might have some popular support for raising sales taxes to lower property taxes.

FREMONT — Judging from a handful of people who attended a town hall meeting Monday, Gov. Jim Pillen might have some popular support for raising sales taxes to lower property taxes.

“Things are way out of whack now,” said Lanny Schmid of Fremont, saying he’d be OK with a hike in sales taxes if it translated into lower property taxes.

Fremont banker Scott Meister agreed, though he added that it will take a variety of steps, not just raising sales taxes, to achieve Pillen’s goal of reducing property taxes by a total of 40%.

“That’s easier said than done,” Meister said. Pillen held a trio of town halls Monday in northeast Nebraska, culminating with more than a hour-long discussion inside a cavernous metal-working business near Fremont, All-Metals Market Inc.

The sessions were part of a series of recent town halls scheduled by the governor over the past few weeks to discuss his legislative priorities, which are topped by an ambitious plan to deliver an additional $1 billion in property tax relief this legislative session.

His proposal, which is still taking shape, has been criticized by both ends of the political spectrum because its key mechanism is raising the state’s sale tax by 1 cent, from 5.5 cents to 6.5 cents.

Conservative groups such as Americans for Prosperity and business organizations like the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce have panned the idea of raising one tax to lower another, saying that’s not “tax reform.”

Meanwhile, the progressive OpenSky Policy Institute has also opposed the sales tax hike as being “regressive,” saying it would hurt low-income Nebraskans hardest because they spend a higher proportion of their income on goods.

Pillen, during his talk, defended his proposal as a “tax shift” that would reverse a shift from a few years ago onto mostly agricultural land that has left an imbalance in the state’s three main taxes: property, sales and income.

“Some are calling me a tax increaser,” the governor told more than 100 people gathered in Fremont. “Give me a break. We need to have a tax shift.”

Right now, about $5.3 billion in property taxes is collected each year, compared with $2.3 billion in sales taxes and $3.6 billion in income taxes.

Previous action by the State Legislature has already reduced local property taxes by about $1 billion, so another $1 billion is needed to achieve Pillen’s goal of a $2 billion or 40% reduction, overall, in local property taxes.

He told those attending the town hall meeting that a 1-cent increase in sales taxes would allow a $500 million shift, which means another half-billion dollars in new revenue is needed.

He touted one aspect of his plan: increasing state tobacco taxes from 64 cents per pack of cigarettes to $2.64, raising the state ranking for tobacco taxes from 42nd highest to 14th.

“If you say you can’t afford that, I say ‘Good,’ ” Pillen said. That’s because, he said, it might mean someone would quit smoking — a habit that led to an early death of the governor’s father.


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